In a small rose garden at the back of the old Hay Gaol heritage museum sits a simple plaque which reads:
Dedicated to the girls aged 13-18 years of age who were incarcerated here 1961-1974 by the NSW Department of Child Welfare. Hay Girls Reunion 3-4 March 2007 Forgotten Australians “Let no child walk this path again”
Visitors to the Gaol might come here for a variety of reasons. The rural NSW town of Hay stands at the crossroads of the Sturt, Cobb and Mid-Western Highways, about half way between Adelaide and Sydney by road, near the edge of a wide flat plain known as the '
long paddock'. With
five museums (one for every 715 residents), Hay boasts an abundance of heritage. One of the five, the Hay Gaol serves as a general purpose local history museum, displaying artefacts from various periods of the town's history, as well as telling its own story as, at various times, gaol, maternity hospital, insane asylum, prisoner of war detention centre and, during the 1960s and early 1970s, the Hay Institute for Girls. In a room near the gaol's entrance a patchwork quilt is printed with images and text explaining these various histories.

The Institute was prison for teenage girls, who had usually already spent time at the Parramatta Girls Institute in Sydney. Typed documentation displayed in the museum entrance explains how the girls were transported in windowless van, even though the railway went right up to the town, in order to disorient them. This was just the beginning of a process designed to break their spirit. Some say they have never recovered.
On arrival, the girls were stripped and showered before being take to a freshly painted cell, where they spent their first ten days scrubbing away the paint. The documentation explains where this cell was located and directs visitors to pay attention to the multiple bolts on the door. However, the cell itself is now filled with telecommunications equipment as part of the museum's main display.
Other cells are similarly filled with local historical materials, each with a different theme, such as clothing, music or military equipment. Two cells toward the end of the gaol corridor are configured as they would have been used: one showing prisoner of war memorabilia from the Second World War and telling the story of the Gaol's only escapee, the other set up as it was used during the time of the Girls' Institute. This cell has an audio recording of an
ABC radio documentary available by pushing a button. The recording tells how the threat of Hay was used to control girls at Parramatta, and how at least one girl was sent there as a punishment for attempting to speak out about sexual assault by Parramatta guards.
The other room that remains as it would have been during the time of the Girls' Institute is the isolation cell, which is at the end of a pathway separated physically from the rest of the building.
In between these two cells, the rose garden is planted along the back of the building, near and area used by community groups for craft and other activities. As the plaque says, the memorial was created in 2007 when a reunion was held at Hay for a group of former inmates.
Questions:
- Who is the rose garden for? Is the memorial for the ex-prisoners or as a reminder to visitors?
- Why is it important to put physical markers at places of pain and trauma?
- Would the memorial make sense without the other parts of the museum, such as the cell and the written signage?